Rossi may not have been smart enough, but what about Focardi?

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Axil Axil 
  To: vortex-l 
  Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2014 9:03 PM
  Subject: Re: [Vo]:Resonant photons for CNT ring current


  All nanoparticles of a certain size have a negative index of refraction as 
regards to the long wavelengths of infrared light. Short wavelengths are 
absorbed. It's a matter of geometry.



  A mix of particles of various sizes is needed in a Ni/H reactor to form an 
amalgam.



  This may be why BIG particles are needed to absorb the infrared light and 
that infrared energy once absorbed in the big particles is passed via dipole 
motion to the smaller particles witch usually reflect that long wavelength  
light.


  It is my evolving opinion that predestination of some sort was involved in 
the Ni/H reactor design because Rossi cannot be this smart.









  On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 11:34 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

    SPP happen at the interface between a dielectric a material with a negative 
index of refraction.(a metal the reflect light).


    should read


    SPP happen at the interface between a dielectric and a material with a 
negative index of refraction.(a metal the reflect light).



    On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 11:32 PM, Axil Axil <[email protected]> wrote:

      SPP happen at the interface between a dielectric a material with a 
negative index of refraction.(a metal the reflect light).


      Do CNTs qualify. They must if the Chinese say so.



      Negative Refractive Index Metasurfaces for Enhanced Biosensing 




      Research as follows:



      Inorganic ultrathin nanocomposites include metals and metal composites, 
various oxides, semiconductor materials, different inorganic compounds but also 
pure elements. Various metals were reported as freestanding nanomembrane 
materials, including chromium, titanium, tungsten, nickel, aluminum, silver, 
gold, platinum; most of these being structural metals having both 
electromagnetic and mechanical functions at the same time. Elemental 
semiconductor nanomembranes were also reported, and among them, an especially 
important mention belongs to silicon freestanding structures, which are 
connected with the most widespread and mature technology. Silicon with a 
thickness ranging between 10 nm and 100 nm was mentioned for instance in the 
context of nanomembrane-based stretchable electronics [95]. Buckled silicon 
nanoribbons and full nanomembranes were also reported [96]. Materials 2011, 4 7 

      An important material for nanomembranes in CBB sensor applications is 
carbon, which may be used in membranes in the form of carbon nanotubes [97] or 
as freestanding, ultrathin diamond or diamandoid film [97]. The excellent 
mechanical properties of such carbon-based materials make them convenient for 
their use as reinforcements for the nanometer-thin freestanding structures, but 
also as the dielectric part of the metasurfaces. Other classes of inorganic 
freestanding nanomembranes include oxide, nitride and carbide structures, many 
of them used either as wide-bandgap semiconductors or insulators. Silicon 
dioxide nanomembranes [98] are among the important ones, again because of the 
widely available and mature silicon technology. Other materials include silicon 
nitride, titanium dioxide, gallium arsenide, etc. A special class of interest 
for this review belongs to plasmonic materials. These include Drude metals. 
Freestanding gold films with a thickness below 100 nm have been known for a 
long time [99]. In our experiments we fabricated chromium-containing 
nanomembranes down to 8 nm thickness and with areas of tens of millimeters 
square [94,100]. Another possibility to obtain freestanding nanomembranes with 
plasmonic properties is to utilize non-metallic Drude materials like 
transparent conductive oxides (e.g., tin oxide, indium oxide, etc.) [101,102]. 
Symmetric plasmonic nanomembranes may be fabricated as laminar nanocomposites. 
Possible implementations include sandwich structures in which top and bottom 
layers are plasmonic material, while the middle layer may be any material 
serving as a support. Figure 1 shows an example of our free-floating 
nanomembrane with an overall thickness of 35 nm and a metal-dielectric-metal 
structure. Figure 1. Free-floating laminar metal/dielectric/metal nanomembrane, 
strata thickness 10 nm + 15 nm + 10 nm, metal Au, dielectric silica, lateral 
dimensions 2 cm × 8 mm, support polished Si. 







      On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 11:04 PM, Bob Cook <[email protected]> wrote:

        Axil

        The Chinese paper said: 
        >>>The calculated dispersion curves are shown in Fig. 4. Different from 
that of the planar structure, in the cylindrical case the electron beam line 
intersects with

        dispersion curves at two points of the two modes.<<

        It seems to say that the SPP phenomenon can occur on plane surface as 
well as a cylindrical surface.  Is this your understanding?  It makes CNT even 
more interesting as a location for SPP to occur. 

        Bob

          ----- Original Message ----- 
          From: Axil Axil 
          To: vortex-l 
          Sent: Tuesday, March 04, 2014 9:44 AM
          Subject: Re: [Vo]:Resonant photons for CNT ring current


          100 megawatts per cm^2 is only 10^8 watts per Cm^2. I have seen in 
research papers and have posted about 10^15 watts per cm^2 maximum seen in 
nanoplasmonic research.


          I suspect that 10^20 watts per cm^2 is produced inside the Ni/H 
reactor because of the optimized nanoparticle configurations used.


          This will produce a magnetic field at 10^16 tesla.



          On Tue, Mar 4, 2014 at 12:15 PM, Jones Beene <[email protected]> 
wrote:



            From: Bob Cook 



            Well the Chinese paper answers your recent question about what type 
of radiation is produced in the SPP  phenomena.



            Whoa. SPP can produce a radiation power density 100 megawatts per 
cm^2? Is that a typo?



            That is quite a shock, in more ways than one .<g> even if the 
authors had somehow missed it by a factor of 100. the only question we should 
be asking ourselves is: why isn't everyone in LENR jumping on implementing SPP 
into their experiments ?



            Perhaps the reputation of the Terahertz Research Center, School of 
Physical Electronics, University of Electronic Science and Technology of China 
is not considered by some to be credible?



            No. methinks the core problem is plain old inertia and smugness. of 
the First World variety. 



            BTW - in terms of education, most of the authors of this paper were 
probably educated here. The State Dept says that of the 1,777 physics 
doctorates awarded in 2011, a typical year, over a third 743 went to temporary 
visa holders - most of whom come from Asia. That should come as no surprise to 
anyone walking around the top University physics departments. 

              From: MarkI-ZeroPoint 



              
http://www.ece.umd.edu/~antonsen/Data/IRMMW-THz%202013/Extended%20Abstracts/2013-09-03-Tu/TU12-6.pdf



              Thanks for posting that reference.  And I might draw your 
attention to my posting a few mins ago. "Of Metronomes and Molecules..." Once 
again, we find ourselves bumping into each other down in this rabbit hole.  ;-)

              Yes, looks like there is an emergent meme within the vortices of 
cyberspace which we are tuned into this week . another angle on the metronome 
effect would a new kind of phonon cooling (as in laser cooling). 

              BTW - if in a nanotube experiment - there does exist a "virtual 
rabbit hole" for "virtual cooling" in which bosons at high temperature can 
condense, then the inside diameter of the CNT could be such a space. A Cooper 
pair of electrons is a composite boson. 

              Thus there could be a hybrid or two step regime for LENR which is 
based on electron acceleration, via CNT entrapment. (not to mention other 
possibilities).










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